Residents on Tyler Street in Gainesville, Texas, reported seeing a large, triangle-shaped UFO that moved low over their neighborhood around 11 p.m. on June 26, 2014.

Photo By Mauricio Ruiz

UFO footage shot by Mauricio Ruiz is shown during the Texas episode of "Chasing UFOs," on National Geographic Channel. The researchers think it looks like a remote-controlled toy.

Photo By Edward A. Ornelas/San Antonio Express-News

A view of the radio tower light (left) and Marfa Lights through a night-vision monocular on Saturday Oct. 20, 2012 at the Marfa Lights Viewing Area, nine miles east of Marfa, Tx.

Photo By Courtesy

This is the first UFO seen by the Laredo group.

Photo By Courtesy photo

The Laredo lights are revealed in a long-exposure photo taken at night on the northern horizon.

Lights hover above a La Salle County oil field drilling site in La Salle in this video screen shot. The unidentified lights and object were captured on video by an oilfield worker at the site and also witnessed by 20 others.

Photo By Edward A. Ornelas/San Antonio Express-News

A view of the screen on the FLIR Thermal Imaging Camera Saturday Oct. 20, 2012 at the Marfa Lights Viewing Area, nine miles east of Marfa, Tx.

Photo By YouTube photo/Mutual UFO Network

This image, posted to the Mutual UFO Network website, purportedly shows a UFO near the Eagle Ford Shale in July 2012.

Stills from video from a deer cam, taken near Nixon, Texas on Dec. 29, 2012. Mutual UFO Network says the triangular lights might be signs of a UFO.

Stills from a deer cam, taken near Nixon, Texas Dec. 29, 2012. An unusual mist appears near ground level.

Stills from a deer cam, taken near Nixon, Texas on Dec. 29, 2012. Mutual UFO Network has raised suspicions about the bright orb seen in the sky near the location of the light triangle of the first photo.

This video shot in December of 2012 shows a trio of UFO's over a neighborhood in Laredo.

Photo By Joe Holley/Houston Chronicle

Retired American Airlines pilot Jim West has written three novels inspired by the Aurora UFO incident 1897. According to the Aurora legend, townspeople buried the UFO pilot and threw the wreckage down a well.

The truth really is out there somewhere and for some, all that's needed is to look skyward.

That's what happened in two Texas towns last week, where "witnesses" gathered in neighborhoods in Gainesville and Austin after seeing some unidentified flying objects.

According to OpenMinds.com, a Texas witness in Austin reported two encounters with a low-flying, square-shaped UFO with four lights that emitted a low-humming sound.

"I observed what appeared to be a square, low-flying object approaching me from the east," the witness told the Mutual UFO Network witness reporting database. "There were four unwavering lights, two red and two yellow. There was very little space between the lights, giving the appearance of a compact square. Strangely, it seemed that one of the sides was its leading edge, not one of the angles."

Then, around 11 a.m. Thursday in Gainesville, Mutual UFO Network, known as MUFON, said a Texas witness there had reproted an "entire block filled with people" watched a large-triangle shaped UFO that moved low over the neighborhood.

"The lights were lined up horizontally, and then right before it disappeared, the lights instantly lined up vertically as if the object turned on its side and then sped away," the witness said.

According to MUFON.com, Texas has a UFO Alert Rating of 3 on a scale of 1-5. The Lone Star State had 30 UFO reports in May, the fourth highest in the nation. For perspecrtive, the highest came from California, with 102 reports in the same period.

Should we text Mulder and Scully? Maybe. But while we decide, check out the gallery of other sightings in Texas.